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A pair of double-crested cormorants, male and female, perched on a lake at Shalom Park in Ocala, Florida.
Cormorant perched in a tree in Shark Valley
Australasian Swamphen (Porphyrio melanotus) standing on a clump of high grass, looking to the left, in Centennial Park, Sydney, Australia.
Wildlife shot of an extremely rare Shoebill (Balaeniceps rex) at the shores of Lake Victoria, Uganda. This stork-like waterbird is getting up to a height of 120 cm, outstanding is the unique bill. While the shoebill is called a stork, genetically speaking it is more closely related to the pelican or heron families. The shoebill is could be found in wetlands or swamps in a few regions of Eastern and Central Africa and it is critical endangered.
The great cormorant, known as the black shag in New Zealand and formerly also known as the great black cormorant across the Northern Hemisphere
Hadedah Ibis - Kruger National Park,  South Africa.
Adult great cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo) drying wings on a tree.
Little Cormorant
American darter Wakodahatchee Wetlands Florida USA
The white-breasted cormorant (Phalacrocorax lucidus) is much like the widespread great cormorant and if not a regional variant of the same species, is at least very closely related. It is distinguished from other forms of the great cormorant by its white breast and by the fact that subpopulations are freshwater birds. Phalacrocorax lucidus is not to be confused with the smaller and very different endemic South Australian black-faced cormorant, which also is sometimes called the white-breasted cormorant.
Neotropic cormorant (Nannopterum brasilianus), great cormorant is perching on wooden branch.
Portrait of beautiful adult Asian woolly-necked stork or Asian woollynecked, low angle view, half shot, in the morning foraging on the agriculture area in nature of tropical dry forest, northeastern Thailand.
Cormorant perched on tree branches
L 36-42cm.\nBreeds on lakes and slow rivers with ample vegetation but also open-water areas.\nMany birds winters in the Netherlands and W Europe; where they occur in large flocks.\nNest a pile of dead reeds at reed bed edge, often fairly visible.\nDefends territory fiercely, swims menacingly at intruders and charge them.\n\nCoots are common Birds in the Netherlands.
A Pied Shag On a Rock at a New Zealand Coast
Coot in a Nature Reserve reed bed.
With the Gulf of Mexico on one side and St. Andrews state park you have many of choices to catch beautiful animals
Limpkin survive in the Amazon rainforest of Ecuador
Merced National Wildlife Refuge
Double-crested Cormorant - profile, portrait
Double Crested Cormorants  in breeding stage, San Ignacio Lagoon, Baja California, Mexico;\nThe Double-crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) is a member of the cormorant family of seabirds. Suliformes,  \tPhalacrocoracidae.
Glossy Hadada Ibis foraging by the water in Uganda
Double-crested cormorant standing by water's edge of wetland in Don Valley Brick Works Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada in early summer
Anhinga (Anhinga anhinga) drying it's wings in the sun , Merrit island, Florida, USA.
Little Pied Cormorant, Microcarbo melanoleucos, enjoying the morning sun on a tree branch.
Shoebill or whalehead or shoe-billed stork (Balaeniceps Rex) in Prague zoo
The African openbill is a species of stork from the family Ciconiidae. It is widely distributed in Sub-Saharan Africa and western regions of Madagascar. This species is considered common to locally abundant across its range, although it has a patchy distribution. Some experts consider there to be two sub-species, A. l. lamelligerus distributed on the continent and A. l. madagascariensis living on the island of Madagascar.Scientists distinguish between the two sub-species due to the more pronounced longitudinal ridges on the bills of adult A. l. madagascariensis. The Asian openbill (Anastomus oscitans) found in Asia is the African openbill’s closest relative. The two species share the same notably large bill of a peculiar shape that gives them their name.
Loon guarding eggs in a nest.
A Glossy ibis in the amazing reserve of Green Cay wetlands in Florida.
Free Images: "bestof:Darkbird.jpg A photo of a Double-crested Cormorant taken in the Everglades Own 2007-12-31 Corvus coronoides Phalacrocorax auritus"
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